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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Staff and agencies in Jerusalem

Five killed in shooting at car wash near Nazareth as Israel sees wave of violence

Israeli police at scene of shooting
Israeli police at the scene of the shooting at a car wash in Yafa an-Naseriyye, near Nazareth. Five people were killed. Photograph: Mahmoud Illean/AP

Five people have been killed in a shooting at a car wash in an Arab town in northern Israel, police said, the latest incident in a wave of criminal violence tearing through the minority community.

Police said they believed the shooting on Thursday in the town of Yafa an-Naseriyye, near the city of Nazareth, was connected to a dispute between organised crime families.

Speaking from the scene of the killings, police spokesperson Eli Levy told public broadcaster Kan that “one person or more” opened fire at a group of men at the car wash.

Maher Khaliliya, head of the Yafia local council, called the shooting a “massacre”, accusing police of responsibility due to lax enforcement.

Israel’s Palestinian minority has long suffered from poverty, discrimination, crime and neglect by the national government.

Israeli police interrogate men
Israeli police talk to men at the scene of the shooting in Yafa an-Naseriyye. Photograph: Mahmoud Illean/AP

Israel’s far-right national security minister, Itamar Ben-Gvir, promised to crack down on crime in Israel’s Palestinian sector when he took office late last year. But the violence has only worsened, and nearly 100 people have been killed this year.

In a statement at the crime scene, Ben-Gvir said years of neglect had turned Israel’s Arab sector into the “wild west”. He also blamed a manpower shortage in the national police force and, vowing to halt the crime wave, called for the establishment of a controversial “national guard”.

Ben-Gvir said the force was meant to fill in gaps in areas where police are spread thin, including in crime-ridden Arab communities. Critics say that Ben-Gvir, an ultranationalist with a history of violent rhetoric against Palestinians, will use the force as a personal militia.

In a separate incident on Thursday, a shooting in a nearby Arab town left a 30-year-old man and a three-year-old girl seriously wounded, police said. The circumstances of that shooting and the identities of the two wounded were not immediately known.

The Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, said he was “shocked” by Thursday’s killings. “We are determined to stop this chain of murders,” he said. He vowed to enlist Israel’s Shin Bet internal security agency – whose main task is to monitor the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip – in the effort.

Mansour Abbas, leader of the Arab party Ra’am, accused the government – and especially Ben-Gvir – of failing the country’s Palestinians. “To bring into the ministry of national security [of] Itamar Ben-Gvir, who doesn’t know what his powers are, in no normal country would they allow such a minister to continue,” he told Israel’s army radio station.

Merav Michaeli, leader of the opposition Labor party, also blamed Ben-Gvir for the growing violence. “This is exactly the opposite of what the boss promised,” she said. “The worst police minister in history. A disgraceful government. Go home.”

Thursday’s shooting is separate from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which has seen more than a year-long surge of violence in the occupied West Bank and East Jerusalem. That fighting has intensified since Israel’s new far-right government took office in late December.

Nearly 120 Palestinians have been killed in the two areas this year, nearly half of whom were members of armed militant groups, according to an estimate by AP. The military says the number of militants is much higher. Meanwhile, Palestinian attacks targeting Israelis have killed at least 21 people.

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